Netizen 24 NGA: South Africa prepares for a new president after Jacob Zuma resigns

In this Feb. 11, 2018 photo, South African Deputy President and African National Congress party President Cyril Ramaphosa delivers a speech at the Grand Parade in Cape Town, South Africa. (AP/AP) February 15 at 5:28 AM Email the author

JOHANNESBURG â" Hours after Jacob Zuma resigned as South Africaâs president, the nationâs soon-to-be leader Cyril Ramaphosa went for an early morning jog on Thursday wearing an African National Congress track suit along the Cape Town waterfront. A few fans spotted him and took a photo with the nationâs incoming president standing in front of a pink sky â" literally, a new dawn for South Africa.

As the news sank in overnight that Zuma would step down afte r a years-long fight to stay in power, a surge of cautious optimism gripped South Africa. The rand strengthened on the news of Zumaâs exit, and the nationâs twitterati celebrated the end of the Zuma era under the hashtag #ZumaIsGoneParty.

For many, Zumaâs resignation was a much-needed affirmation that after a bruising few years, South Africaâs young democracy was still intact. After calling foul on the Zuma administration time and again, the nationâs tenacious press, civil society, and legal institutions finally pushed the hand of the ruling party to self-correct.

âAt the beginning, the ANC was in total denial, and we actually got here,â said William Gumede, executive chairman of the Democracy Works Foundation. âIt tells you something about civil society in the country. Itâs extraordinary.â

But Ramaphosa, who became acting president after Zuma resigned, wonât have long to savor the moment. On Thursday afternoon he is expected to be elected by parliament and sworn in as president â" becoming the person now charged with salvaging the legacy of Africaâs most famous liberation movement.

Zumaâs nine years in office, marred by a string of corruption allegations, drove even party loyalists away from the once invincible ANC.

But to many here, the most destructive aspect of his legacy was his failure as an anti-apartheid struggle veteran to deliver on the promises of a democratic South Africa. Twenty-four years after Mandela rose to power promising a nation of shared prosperity, the country remains one of the worldâs most unequal, with many black South Africans living in conditions much like those they endured under the white-nationalist government.

âThere is a need to reckon with the failures of the democratic era,â the Nelson Mandela Foundation said in a statement on Thursday. âIt is not going to be enough simply to clean up and fix.â

For years, Zuma refused to acknowledge that real ity, driving tens of thousands of South Africans into the streets to call for his resignation. Until late Wednesday night, it appeared that resignation might not come.

Zuma refused to step down even after the ANCâs leadership formally recalled him on Tuesday, laying bare the divisions that had festered within the party for years. Finally, in a rambling television address, he announced that he would leave office, âeven though I disagree with the decision of the leadership of my organization.â

Instead, he said, his decision was spurred by altercations that had taken place outside the party headquarters in Johannesburg in recent days.

âNo life should be lost in my name, and also the ANC should never be divided in my name,â the 75-year-old head of state said in the statement. In an interview earlier in the day, he warned that infighting among leaders in the governing p arty could end in violence on the streets between ANC supporters who disagree with one another.

Many South Africans saw his departure as a fresh opportunity for the country to reclaim its status as a political and economic leader of sub-Saharan Africa. Already, Ramaphosa has presented himself on the global stage as someone ready to impose discipline on fraying government institutions.

Like Zuma, he is a member of the countryâs anti-apartheid elite. But while Zuma boasted of his lack of formal education and lived publicly as a polygamist in keeping with Zulu tribal traditions, Ramaphosa enters office as one of the countryâs wealthiest black business executives and one who once taught law at Stanford University as a visiting professor.

Ramaphosa will serve until 2019, when he is expected to lead the ANCâs campaign in â" and most likely win â" the next presidential election.

Zuma was South Africaâs fourth president since the end of apartheid, the h arsh racial-segregation policy that denied rights to the black majority. Born poor, Zuma taught himself to read and write and joined the anti-apartheid ANC as a teenager.

He became a member of its armed wing in 1962 and was among dozens of activists convicted of trying to overthrow the white-minority government. He served 10 years in the infamous Robben Island prison with Mandela and other ANC leaders.

As president, Zuma survived eight parliamentary no-confidence motions and was facing another when he stepped down. He was caught up in numerous corruption scandals and was accused in 2005 of raping a family friend who was HIV-positive. He eventually was acquitted of that charge but stunned South Africans by explaining that he had showered after sex to reduce the risk of contracting HIV.

Later in his presidency, he faced an onslaught of criticism for using government funds to renovate his private home. He was ordered to repay more than $500,000 in that case. He for med a close relationship with the powerful Gupta brothers, businessmen who were said to control the levers of the state. His erratic economic policies led to a dramatic decline in the value of the countryâs currency, the rand.

âThere has been a broad culture in the ANC that was conducive to shady deals and personal enrichment. But Jacob Zuma really took that culture to new extremes, and in the process I think he did irreparable harm to the ANC,â said Susan Booysen, a professor at Wits University in Johannesburg who has written extensively about the ANC.

What kept Zuma afloat was partially his popularity in his native province of KwaZulu-Natal, where rural ANC supporters were willing to overlook the scandals that had sparked outrage in South Africaâs urban centers. The more-urbane Ramaphosa will have to win over that rural constituency, along with those who defected from the party in recent years.

As his support waned, Zuma tried to shield himself from cr iticism by drawing on his connection to Mandela and the liberation struggle. To some South Africans, that strategy echoed the tactic that neighboring Zimbabweâs Robert Mugabe had used in a bid to shore up support for his collapsing presidency â" revisiting his own revolutionary bona fides.

When Mugabe was forced out of power in a coup in November, South Africaâs popular News24 website ran a column with the headline: âMugabe goes â" is Zuma next?â

Zumaâs resignation came almost exactly three months later. Rebuilding one of the worldâs legendary political parties will be a much tougher haul.

Sieff reported from Cape Town, South Africa.

Read more

Ruling party demands Zuma step down amid South Africa uncertainty

Cyril Ramaphosa elected head of South Africa ruling party

The book that could change South Africa

Todayâs coverage from Post correspondents around the world

Like Washington Post World on Facebook and stay updated on foreign news